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Examining Tokyo's Media Immersion Pods

the terminal of geoff goodfellow writes "The New York Times has an article on the Bagus Gran Cyber Café in Tokyo, where customers rent so-called media immersion pods. From the article: 'At first glance the spread looks officelike, but be warned: these places are drug dens for Internet addicts outfitted with VHS and DVD players, satellite and regular television on a Toshiba set, PlayStation 2, Lineage II and a Compaq computer loaded with software, all the relevant downloads and hyperspeedy Internet. In the nearby library were thousands of comic books, magazines and novels.'"

123 comments

  1. But wait.. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think that they're missing the mandatory catheter. I mean, who in hell wants to actually get up and take a whiz once you're immersed? Or maybe that's part of the "immersion" experience.

    1. Re:But wait.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... but your forgetting: Does it run Linux?

    2. Re:But wait.. by kfg · · Score: 1

      I mean, who in hell wants to actually get up and take a whiz once you're immersed?

      Alan Shepard solved that problem.

      When ya gotta go, well, ya gotta go.

      KFG

  2. Novel idea by cdogbert · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So why aren't these in the US yet?

    1. Re:Novel idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cuz, US is neandrethal u moron!

    2. Re:Novel idea by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 3, Funny

      coz we still have cheap motels (thank god).

    3. Re:Novel idea by Jozer99 · · Score: 3, Funny

      People in the US don't like being enclosed in a 4ft by 3ft cubicle for hours or days. We also wouldn't feel particularly private in a 5 ft tall cubicle surrounded by strangers.

    4. Re:Novel idea by Golias · · Score: 3, Informative

      In the US, we have living rooms and dens where all our media needs are meet. Have you been in a typical Japanese house?

      This is why private karaoke rooms are such a hit there. If you want to get eight people together, doing so at somebody's house is out of the question.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    5. Re:Novel idea by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Except the karaoke boxes also have a huge song library.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    6. Re:Novel idea by bhiestand · · Score: 2, Funny
      We also wouldn't feel particularly private in a 5 ft tall cubicle surrounded by strangers.

      In Japan, 5 feet is more than enough to keep the average person from being able to see over the wall :).

      Sorry, low blow, I know...
      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    7. Re:Novel idea by JohnnyBigodes · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's a bit more of a "short" blow, mind you ;)

    8. Re:Novel idea by cuantar · · Score: 1

      Japan has love hotels! All the advantages of seedy motels, bundled together with bedside karaoke and free porn.

      --
      Legalize it.
    9. Re:Novel idea by Golias · · Score: 1

      By, "except" I think maybe you meant to say "and also."

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    10. Re:Novel idea by Edzor · · Score: 1

      i like to call it the "Daniel Boone factor".

      more people should wear coonskin caps

    11. Re:Novel idea by dieman · · Score: 1

      Comcast is starting to experiment with using VOD to fill this role, albiet with a smaller overall collection. However, someday we will see karoke revolution double max extreme on PS3 that will probally have like 5000 songs or some shit. ;)

      --
      -- dieman - Scott Dier
    12. Re:Novel idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because a homeless stranger would make it his home.

      No, wait...make that a wired homeless stranger.

  3. wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by UfoZ · · Score: 5, Informative

    What a fancy and pretentious name for a manga cafe.

    These are all over the place, nothing special, and a good cheap way to spend the night if you missed the last train or don't have a hotel. You get your own cubicle with internet access or a console, you can read manga or watch a movie or surf the net, whatever. Plus free refills for soft drinks.

    It's nice but I don't see what the big deal is.

    1. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 2, Informative

      I went to one of these to check my email while finishing up visa paperwork for my wife. They're quite convenient and comfortable, and the rates are reasonable. US companies would probably be afraid that some people would just try to live there, given the exact same setup. I'm pretty sure a few of the people in the one I visited were spending enough time there to change their address.

      --
      GPL: Free as in will
    2. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i agree it's pretty cool... you don't have to hunch over your laptop because some weirdo keeps peering over at what you're looking at.

    3. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by patio11 · · Score: 1

      Yep, you can get all of these things at the local Internet cafe in GIFU for $4 an hour (Gifu is a prefecture in Japan which is so rural that I was suprised we had running water, to say nothing of gigabit ethernet -- although my apartment doesn't have a shower or heated water, curses...)

    4. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by caranha · · Score: 1

      Those were exactly my thoughts when I read the article. It seems some reporter was on a slow afternoon, and decided to write about "exotic japan" to make up for not coming up with any really interesting news.

      And the first picture in the article is of a CD shop in Tokyo, not a cybercafe.

    5. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      Popeye's Media One rocks, baby.

      However, on a recent trip to Korea, I discovered that theirs are *way* cooler, not to mention cheaper(!) Except for the truly funky smell in the stairwell leading up to it, which is probably caused precisely by those who live there all the time.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    6. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" by tokyopimpdaddy · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I read this and as I was getting to the artical, I was planning when to check this out. Oh. It's a manga/internet cafe. Ah well.

      Still, if you haven't been to one, they are kind of interesting places. The customers are the kind of otaku who you'd find in Akiba most days (and 'otaku', now there's a loaded word...).

      I used to go to one in my old haunt of Kameari in downtown east Tokyo because it was cheap, had coffee, games, manga and air conditioning (summer paradise) and if I was studying Japanese, there were plenty of people who could try to explain things to me. I don't know of an equivalent place to learn a language anywhere else.

      Also, if you think you've seen manga shops, you have to witness some of the bigger ones. Manga as far as the eye can see, and tempers can fray if they're out of sequence. All in all, it's nice to see these often downtrodden places getting a bit of publicity, even if it is only rebranding.

      --
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      Mac OS X 10.4.x MacBook Core Duo 2GHz
      WinXP Athlon64 3700+ DFI/Nvidia6800
  4. They are. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 4, Funny

    Look at them. They're already here. They're called "cubicles".

    1. Re:They are. by pimpimpim · · Score: 2, Funny
      FTA: Mr. Isshow told me. "Your identity can be in flux. You go to these places not to present yourself, but to lose yourself. Lose your name, your position, your pride."

      Sounds like a cubicle, all right...

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    2. Re:They are. by mooncaine · · Score: 1

      Funny & perceptive.

  5. a.k.a. by The+Clockwork+Troll · · Score: 5, Funny

    Locally these are known as "" which translates literally to "birth control parlor".

    --

    There are no karma whores, only moderation johns
  6. Frightening by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've always found Japan's ultra consumption to be frightening. This article reaffirmed my belief that they've got major issues. I sent it to my girlfriend, just the link, no comments. Her response was "what a distressing culture." At least, I'm not alone in my opinion.

    1. Re:Frightening by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Liar.

      Everyone knows you have no girlfriend.

  7. Truth in advertising by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 1

    If only they lived up to their names. Still the ability to rent a quiet space in a busy city + drinks would be nice, although I would personally put it to more serious uses than reading comics or surfing. Gernerally a quiet enviroment is most important when you are working hard, but personally I feel like I can goof off and read a novel anywhere. Kant on the other hand requires absolute silence.

    1. Re:Truth in advertising by UniXY · · Score: 0

      If by Kant and absolute silence you mean the sound of yourself sleeping... then yes, I see your point.

    2. Re:Truth in advertising by ozmanjusri · · Score: 2, Funny
      ,i>Kant on the other hand requires absolute silence.

      Really? I thought he was a real pissant who was very rarely stable.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    3. Re:Truth in advertising by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 3, Funny

      If by Kant and absolute silence you mean the sound of yourself sleeping... then yes, I see your point.
      Let me put it this way, if there is anything else going on you can be sure I would be paying attention to it rather than Kant. The man doesn't know how to end a sentance.

    4. Re:Truth in advertising by JanneM · · Score: 1

      Kant on the other hand requires absolute silence.

      The man was a giant in philosphoy, no doubt. But didn't he ever hear about ghost writers? Seriousy, it's a testament to the greatness of his ideas that he is still read - no less remembered - despite the hideous Lovecraftian abomination that passes for prose in his works.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    5. Re:Truth in advertising by evilneko · · Score: 1

      what, no +1 Python (Monty) reference mod? :)

      --
      Slashdot - where to disagree, is to be a troll
  8. That sounds like my flat by Vyvyan+Basterd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Except my computer is an HP, and I don't have a VHS player anymore.

  9. Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by sparkydevil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Japanese people do not use these spaces because they are actively seeking out media, but because they are using the space as a refuge from long commutes and cramped, shared, homes. Japanese people often work very late and live over one hour from the city, making it almost impossible to visit each others homes. To have any privacy, couples have to meet outide the home, and places such as Bagus, karaoke boxes and love hotels are all geared to this market.

    1. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 1

      Tell me more about these "love hotels"

    2. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by JanneM · · Score: 3, Informative

      Also, these internet and manga cafés are usually open around the clock, and have lately begun to offer amenities like showers, so quite a few people use them as a cheap place to crash if they've been partying and missed the last train home.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    3. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by JanneM · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hotels renting rooms over night or by the hour, often with some kind of theme setting. It's not for prostitution, as many westerners assume at first, but a popular way for people to get together, especially since the expensive rents mean you often live at home until you marry.

      My favourite around here in Osaka is "Chapel Christmas", which, as you may guess, is Christmas-themed, complete with a huge Santa and grinning happy elves all over the facade. I have a few pictures here:

      Chapel Christmas

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    4. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by Instine · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Actually, this thing about not being able to meet other people because their (Japanese people's) houses are so microscopic, is starting to grate. The biggest difference between a Japanese house and an American house (that I've noticed) is a house in the US tends to be noisy, lawless, and untidy. Making it difficult to have people round. A Japanese house (yes probably through necessity) is, in comparison, polite quiet and tidy. And the home made food infinitely more apatising. So the pods being a refuge idea is a US construct I think.

      This whole US v Jap thing is tiered. More so than the Germany v England thing here (in the UK). Japan WILL do some things better than/before the US. Live with it.

      --
      Because you can - or because you should?
    5. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by st1d · · Score: 1

      >>a huge Santa and grinning happy elves

      That's a slightly disturbing mental picture.

      --
      Microsoft has just released their much anticipated hands-free cordless mouse. Warning, it may hurt a little at first.
    6. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      Could be worse...I read that first as 'grinning happy Elvises'. Eek!

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    7. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by JanneM · · Score: 5, Informative

      A Japanese house (yes probably through necessity) is, in comparison, polite quiet and tidy. And the home made food infinitely more apatising. So the pods being a refuge idea is a US construct I think.

      I live in Japan, and it's not altogether "a US construct". Consider: you're 20-something, and you're of course living at home, since the rent on even a small apartment is absolutely ruinous for a single person. You do have a job, though, and since - if you're a very consentious child - you're sharing the living expenses with your parents, you have a quite comfortable level of disposeable income even with a pretty low entry-level position (and if your parents are indulgent, you aren't paying anything at all, making that income all the more significant). The same goes for your current SO.

      In fact, if you save for a few years, together you could in fact afford that apartment in a Tokyo suburb or somewhere in southern Osaka. But until your relationship becomes long-term and serious enough, there's of course no way you're goi9ng to risk something like that. So for the time being you're relegated to whatever resources you have. And seriously, with money burning in your pocket, are you going to spend an hour on the local train to go to your or your SO:s parent's house, endure socializing, knowing winks (not to mention the ever-present risk of baby pictures) to retire to a small bedroom all of a couple of meters away from the living room where the old folk are laughing at the latest lame Osaka burlesque on the TV?

      Or are you going to a dinner out on the town, followed by a short walk to a clean, fresh hotel in any kind of style you wish (with no shortage of "special" styles whenever you want to spice things up a bit (there famously is a Hello Kitty Dungeon in one hotel here in Osaka)), with no interruptions, thin walls, kid brothers or parents, and with attentive, affordable room service at the touch of a button?

      I absolutely, totally, unconditionally agree on the state of Japanese living - it really is neater, cleaner and more friendly than anywhere I've been. But for those times you want to be alone together, it's really not optimal.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    8. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by Instine · · Score: 0

      Good points well raised. (BTW I'm a newbie at /. WTF is with the Karma system? This is the second time someone's knocked karma off me for making a fairly malign comment and I've barely made ten posts. Am I being an arse or is someone else?

      Yer your point of veiw is a valid one for sure. I live in London, which challanges Tokyo on cost of rent. And now I've finally got enough to start considering the property ladder (aged 30 with wife and child), I've got passed what seems the imsermountable task of nesting in such a costly city. So I know what you're saying. I could see these Pods doing well in London, as more and more folk have a cyber interest now. But will you get addicts staying for too long, not here I don't think, but could be wrong.

      --
      Because you can - or because you should?
    9. Re:Mssed-the-last-train immersion pods by McFadden · · Score: 1
      They've tried to re-brand them a couple of times as "boutique hotels", but the love hotel name seems to stick. They're fantastic places to visit. Often they have much larger rooms than you would find in the average Japanese hotel, and they're spotlessly clean. They often have videogame consoles, big plasma widescreen tvs, karaoke machines and multiple free movie and porn channels.

      They exist for a number of reasons-one being that Japanese salarymen often have a number of girlfriends on the go in addition to their wife; another being that Japanese homes tend to have paper thin walls, so you can't have sex without half the apartment building knowing about it.

      My personal favorite if you ever find yourself in the city of Sapporo, is the Egyptian-themed "Pharoah's"

  10. Already in the US by illuminatedwax · · Score: 4, Funny

    I call it "my bedroom."

    --
    Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
    1. Re:Already in the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have that too, but I call it "mom's basement".

  11. extremities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a while, a lot of technology has been about 'seamless experiences' and 'integration'
    mixing the real world and the technological world as much as possible.
    things like always on cell phones and internet.

    people take 'retreats' to get away from all the technology and just relax.
    maybe this is kinda like the opposite. Take a retreat for a day or two from the real world,
    and have a relaxing time with lots of media.

    just a thought.

  12. you're bullshiting or completely clueless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I've always found Japan's ultra consumption to be frightening.

    Japan doesn't have a lot of cars, the homes there are small, and often they don't even have room heating. I find it hard to imagine you're that ignorant, you're probably lieing through your teeth and really a 300 pound american with a hummer.

    1. Re:you're bullshiting or completely clueless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I find it hard to believe that Japan's modest lifestyle has led it to be the 4th largest consumer of energy in the world. They used to be the second largest consumer of oil in the world until China came on the scene, which is despite the fact that they import nearly all of their oil - where as the largest oil consumer, America, imports less than half.

      http://www.geohive.com/charts/charts.php?xml=en_co ns&xsl=en_const

      While you are incorrect, and they are, as you can see, huge energy consumers (which seems to be what you're attempting to disprove) that was not really the type of consumption I was referring to with my comments.

      When the US rebuilt Japan, the policy makers saw to it that Japan would be a capitalist utopia of sorts where life was predicated around work and consumption. As you may know, making lots of money and spending it on material goods makes you happy. At least, that's what we're led to believe. In Japan you have this disposable culture, as is in America, taken to illogical extremes. These "media immersion pods" are purportedly a way of getting away from the bustle of the city, of careers, and of societal expectations. That's how people get away? That's how they interact? Go on dates even, by totally isolating themselves from reality and consuming in solitude? Yes, that to me, is frightening. It's an incredibly passive existence (though most people live passively) A respite for me means playing my guitar, or piano. Going out and taking some photos. Writing. Learning something I didn't know yesterday.

      To me it seems like they don't want to move away from this exposure, but to become totally immersed in it in order to shed their identities. It's like popping pills. They move away from themselves. It's the same reason people shoot heroin. To each his own, I guess. I'm sorry that I find these trends disturbing.

      Oh, and please mind the personal attacks. I'm not damning the nation of Japan. I just think this exemplifies problems I've perceived in their culture.

    2. Re:you're bullshiting or completely clueless by Durf · · Score: 1

      You're taking this brief explanation of one form of manga/Internet cafe and extrapolating an awful lot of doom and gloom from it. This is not "how people get away," or "how people interact." It's a store that offers a bunch of services. That's all. You're likely to see 20 or 30 customers pop in for an hour to check email for every single maladjusted otaku with an unhealthy focus on online existence.

      Probably 95% of all Japanese people will never set foot in a manga kissa or an Internet cafe. Stop writing pop sociology screeds until you figure out the difference between "description of a nation" and "description of a type of shop used by a few people in one subset of that nation."

    3. Re:you're bullshiting or completely clueless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, so they use a lot more electricity than liechtenstein or tuvalu, so what?

      Your link doesn't work for me, Here's some figures, on consumption of electricity, oil and natural gas ( http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/count rylisting.html ) adjusted for population (per person, per year)

      US
      12250 kwh
      24.5 barrels
      2123 m^3

      Japan
      7424 kwh
      15.97 barrels
      679 m^3

      Who do the stats say is exemplifying consumption the extreme? SUVland.

      But since Japan's a lot colder than the US, maybe Canada would be a a better comparison?

      15737 kwh
      25.36 barrels
      2924 m^3

      Even the socialist bastards of sweden(no offense meant to swedes or socialists, or bastards) use a lot more electricity per person than the Japanese:

      14618 kwh
      14.01 barrels
      108.7 m^3

      And you say the Japanese believe that spending more money makes you happier? That's not as bad as believing that spending lots of money makes you better, like in america.

  13. Sex? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    But sex at the Gran Cyber Café is not just in the fiction. All around me, couples were making out.

    I say we /.ters need to do a field study on this.

  14. The article answered my question about... by OneInEveryCrowd · · Score: 1

    a japanese tv show called "Maid in Akihabara". The main character, a former bar girl working in a maid cafe, can't afford a place to live so she checks into an internet cafe each night. I was wondering if people in Japan actually did this, but the article makes it look very possible.

    I still have another question, totally outside the scope of the article. In the movie Koi no Mon (aka Otakus in Love), there is a cosplay brothel. Anybody know if these exist or did the movie make that up ?

    1. Re:The article answered my question about... by Evil+Dave+Letterman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Oh, they exist, and have done for at least a decade. They're known as "ime-kura" short for "image club" -- which is a very very very nice way of saying "role-playing brothel". Most of them, in an effort to skirt under the law, don't allow "SEX" but allow everything but... meaning, no outright penetration, but anything else goes. Even "labiel" sex. Most imekura stick to normal fettishes like nurses and airline stewardesses, but many take on anime and video game characters as well.

    2. Re:The article answered my question about... by davidsyes · · Score: 2, Interesting

      INDEED!

      I had to use the toilet in one (in Japan, in English, one asks for "the toilet", not the "bathroom") and there were all sorts of meticulous posters explaining not to shower in the toilet room. Instead, rent the shower...

      I think the shower was priced around Y300 or Y500 (roughly US$3.30 or US $5.50 at the time. For that, and a $10 movie, though, about every 2 hours, it could be pricey. So, I think some people just used the desk area, where some "overnight" spaces were dedicated. I don't think overnighters had a "cubicle" or "pod" in which to sleep. There were resting areas. In the open. At least in the one in Shibuya I went to.

      But, it could get pricey, tho one still could save Y300 to Y2000 per day on travel costs. Just buy some undies and socks and toss out the soiled/used stuff or recycle it. Even THAT can get pricey, too. But, time being very priceless probably is a strong motivator for some to say in town and not worry about missing the last train, only to be able to have 5 hours of sleep and home and turn around and sleep an hour on the train on the way back to work-- if waking is not a problem when having to transfer to another train.

      --
      Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
    3. Re:The article answered my question about... by McFadden · · Score: 1
      These types of places are also known as "sekku-hara" (a Japanese abbreviation meaning "sexual harassment"). Basically you go into a themed room (office, hospital ward, subway train) and act out your fantasy of sticking your had up a schoolgirls skirt, or whatever turns you on.

      There's a certain school of thought that suggests doing this kind of thing in a club with professional working girls cuts the amount of genuine sexual abuse in society, but I don't know of any empirical data to back this up.

  15. local equivalent by OneInEveryCrowd · · Score: 1

    I tend to use Barnes and Noble for this purpose. Kind of a combination manga/o'reilly books cafe. Sometimes I even pay for coffee.

  16. chinese, japanese, it's all the same by nfarrell · · Score: 1
    FTA:

    I went to mine too, hit the button that changed the keyboard from Chinese characters to QWERTY, and answered some e-mail.

    The author doesn't even know the Japanese have their own alphabet (3 actually). This guy reminds me of the characters in extras
    1. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 2, Informative

      The typical setup I saw gives you hiragana by default (one of two phonetic syllableries) and lets you convert them to the traditional (pre-simplified) Chinese characters adopted many years ago by the Japanese. There are a few keys which allow you to modify the input method to input "romaji" as well as the various Japanese writing systems.

      Actually, the Kanji are Chinese characters (called Hanzi, roughly "people's writing" in China IIRC) which were adopted in Japan long before Katakana and Hiragana were created. The kana systems borrowed heavily from radicals in Chinese characters for many of their shapes. Slightly more accurately, hiragana borrowed heavily from Chinese characters to make a simpler writing system primarily for poetry, and then katakana borrowed heavily from hiragana when Japanese noblemen didn't want to use a writing system developed by women. Go figure...

      --
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    2. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by kote-men-do · · Score: 2, Informative

      As a Japanologist I can say you're completely wrong about some points.

      1) Hanzi simply means Han Characters, (referring to the Han Dynasty, not the Han Chinese)
      2) Hiragana was derived from cursively written man'yogana (Characters used for phonetic value, not meaning). This was used by women in the beginning, hence it was also known as Onnade ("woman's hand"). These weren't the only kana in use however, they were simply standardized by the goverment from the large pool of "hentaigana".
      3) Katakana are taken from graphemes (small building blocks) from characters. These are NOT cursive. These were originally developped by monks (early Heian) to hint at the pronunciation of characters.
      4) Japanese characters are not the same as the traditional Chinese characters. I also study Literary Chinese which uses traditional characters, and there are quite a few differences between characters. There are differences in stroke order, stroke count, radicals, etc... A simple example is the character for "study" (xue2, gaku, mana, bu). The Japanese use the simplified variant of it, not the traditional one.

    3. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      Everything I've written came from either my Asian History/Japanese instructors in college, or books from the uni's library. My minor was Asian Studies, and although it may have been a decade or so for myself, it's accurate to my recollection.

      1) My Asian Studies instructor mentioned that "Han" origninally referred to "The People". He was Chinese, I'll have to trust him on that. I actually did a paper in his class on the very subject we're discussing, based partially on his input and partially on external research.

      2) Take a look at the Hiragana, and take a look at the more common radicals used in Chinese. You'll find a lot of similar characters, just write the radical in cursive. The Man'yo gana were taken directly from Chinese characters to most reliable accounts, and could be seen as an intermediate step between Chinese characters and Hiragana. Some argue that it came from old Korean forms, but the Chinese influence is too strong to ignore.

      3) They are not cursive, this is true. Many of them appear simply as a non-cursive forms of the Hiragana character to which they are equivalent. Look at "ka", "uu", and "ee" for examples. Nearly identical but for the writing style. There are a few characters which are completely different, however my point was the actual need for a second phonetic syllablery at the time was questionable at best. A cursive writing system was probably seen as too "feminine", no doubt that was sufficient reason for them.

      4) They were originally the same, although I wouldn't doubt that some of the characters received some "Cross-pollination" as time went on. The original infusion of Chinese characters happened long before the simplification was formalized, which was actually quite recent, although simplified forms had been used in the past in China.

      --
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    4. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by kote-men-do · · Score: 2, Interesting

      1) No, your instructor is wrong. It's not because he's Chinese he knows about Chinese history. I know more Japanese history than Japanese people themselves for example. Simply because I study the country at university in more detail than they did in high school. Han refers to the area Hanzhung. The people from Hanzhung simply refered to themselves as Han. Now when the characters came via Paekche to Japan I'm sure they were referred to as "Han characters" or "the writing of the Han", but "people's writing" is simply wrong. That would be "Min2zi4". I don't know if that term actually exists or not.

      2) There is no "uu" and "ee" in any transcription system. Just "u" and "e". A cursive writing style was not seen as feminine (non-cursive writing of characters is just very slow due to having to lift the brush time after time), it was specifically the hiragana, because these were used by "uneducated" women (they were uneducated because higher education was forbidden for them). However due to such works as the Genji Monogatari it gained popularity and replaced katakana and Chinese as writing in official documents. Also, the hiragana were NOT developped from JUST the radicals. When you're writing in cursive you don't just write the radical and omit the rest of the character...

      3) You're wrong. The two alphabets were developped independantly. The more educated folk simply used man'yogana instead of onnade. Katakana was developed by monks to aid in the reading of kanbun (Chinese texts annotated by Japanese). The similarities you discuss such as the kana for "u" is simply because they were derived from the SAME man'yougana, this is the case for "ka" and "u" but not for "e". The syllabaries were developped from the same source, but it is completely WRONG to say that one develloped from the other or vice versa. This is a FACT.

      4) The Japanese goverment held some kanji reforms themselves after WW2, where complex forms (kyuujitai) were simplified into variants (shinjitai) that were already used in handwriting.

    5. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by cabjoe · · Score: 1

      Completely OT but cheers for that link. Especially liked the Patrick Stewart clip.

      Patrick Stewart: You're not married, you don't have a girlfriend and you've never watched Star Trek?

      Ricky Gervais: No

      PS: Good Lord

      --
      If I hadn't seen such riches, I could live with being poor.
    6. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by JanneM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hiragana and Katakana developed independently, as the other poster mentioned. The basic reason for both was the need in Japanese to record sound symbolisms (such as verb inflections) not needed in Chinsese; put shortly, Hanzi was a great fit for Chinese, but not all that great for Japanese (as evidenced by the difference in the way "original" Japanese words and chinese loanwords are written). Hiragana and Katakana were developed during different times of close contact, and were in one case a shorthand of Hanzi commonly used for phonetic spelling, and in the other, as common subcomponents with a well-known phonetic use (though these were different from radicals). In a few cases, and over a millennium of confusion, they resolved to nearly the same shape, but that is incidental.

      More to the point, there was not one single time that Hanzi crossed the sea and became Kanji. That has happened in multiple waves, so some characters are of younger origin than others - and this is also part of the explanation why some characters have so many readings; being common, they had changed over time and picked up new readings and meanings every time there was a new burst of cultural exchange between the countries. Also, a few characters have gone the other way, originating in Japan and being used in China as well.

      --
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    7. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, Battle of the Asian Nerds live on Slashdot!

    8. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      1) He's a Chinese history instructor, from China, and was referring to the Han chinese. According to him, "Han" simply means "the people".

      2) You're picking nits and forgetting the original intention. Ignoring this tangent, the kana and kanji came from Chinese characters, and that was my original point.

      3) Yes, but the "Onna-de" was created about two centuries prior to Katakana (7th century vs. 9th century IIRC.) I'd be surprised if the monks who created Katakana had no knowledge of it.

      4) Sure, but they did not mirror the Chinese reforms character to character. They are generally based on the traditional characters.

      Relax, it's the weekend. There are better things to do than post "wrong, wrong, wrong" all over slashdot.

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      GPL: Free as in will
    9. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      I certainly agree with you on both parts. I'm not positing that the kana aren't useful, but rather they could have used one rather than creating two forms. The "Onna-de" was still around when katakana was created. I'm pretty sure Katakana's creation was a case of intellectual "migi-no-te", basically "Let's create our own rather than use a woman's script".

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    10. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      Should we make it pay-per-view? :)

      --
      GPL: Free as in will
    11. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by uhmmmm · · Score: 1

      And to make things even more complicated, China now uses simplified characters, which in many cases have been simplified the same a they have been in Japan (like your example of "study"). But other characters have been simplified differently in Chinese (often times simplified moreso than they have been in Japanese), for example "talk" (seems to be "hua" in Chinese. Has the readings "wa", "kai", and "hanasu" in Japanese). The radical on the left is seven strokes in Japanese, but I believe it's been simplified to two strokes in Chinese.

      Of course, Taiwan still uses traditional characters ...

    12. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by mooncaine · · Score: 1

      It's hilarious when someone does a few minutes of Google searching and then, having "researched", crams their big fat foot in their mouth. Thanks for that; I needed a chuckle.

      Did you at all consider that the reporter was in *Japan* when she visited and made interviews?

      Did you think she forgot?

      Did you think?

    13. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by The+Wing+Lover · · Score: 1

      Well, "kanji" translates literally as "chinese characters" so I don't think that the author was too far off-base..

      --

      - In Capitalist America, law violates YOU!

    14. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by gullevek · · Score: 1

      I am supporting your role. I haven't stupied japanese history at the University, but what I gathered together I can fully spport the fact how Hiragana and Katakana was created (manga remark: ramnas words are written in Hirgana when he is a girl to support).
      Same with the Katakana. They where created by monks.

      --
      "Freiheit ist immer auch die Freiheit des Andersdenkenden" - Rosa Luxemburg, 1871 - 1919
    15. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Nexx · · Score: 1

      But now the two kana forms have separate uses. To me, a native Japanese speaker, removing the contextual clues found in Kanji, katakana and hiragana, and writing everything in hiragana, makes all but the most simple ideas completely unintelligible.

    16. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      I can see the use of Kanji, and maybe one kana system, but using two separate kana syllableries just seems excessive. I'm curious, aside from emphasis, loan words and maybe kids' writing, all of which could be written in hiragana, how much of an impact do you think the lack of katakana would have were it never developed?

      --
      GPL: Free as in will
    17. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Nexx · · Score: 1

      That's like saying "I see the requirement for maybe one font weighting, but italics, bold and underline seems a bit excessive".

      I can't say what my life reading Japanese would be like if certain bits were never developed. That's like asking what my English life would be like without pronouns.

    18. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that it's quite the same, as it's a different set of glyphs as opposed to a modified weight, slant or a line under the text. I guess if anything it's more like cursive and print in languages using roman characters, but the "print" form is typically used to ensure legibility since many people's cursive handwriting is sloppy. Since it doesn't modify the spoken form, it's not quite like a pronoun.

      Having three written forms like Japanese does is relatively unique in the languages I've studied, which does make it interesting, but I have to wonder how much it really adds. I posed the same question to my wife (also a native Japanese speaker), she doesn't think there'd be much of an impact, but one person's a pretty small data source.

      --
      GPL: Free as in will
    19. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This guy makes it sound like hitting the button changed the actual layout of the keyboard. A standard Japanese keyboard is qwerty just like America and most of the rest of the world. Aside from a few differences in locations for a few characters and simbols, the layout is mostly the same. In windows, you can change the input method via a special key on the japanese keyboard, or if you're using a US keyboard to your own keystroke combo (mine is set to shift-alt on the windows box, and apple-space on the mac).

      When you type to input japanese characters you type phonetically, ie to type the character "ka" you type k a,the hit the space bar to cycle through choices of different japanese characters (hiragana and kanji) and chinese kanji characters. There is a way to type directly into japanese characters where one key press input one character, and the characters are printed on all japanese keyboards, but I don't know of anyone who uses that input method.

      To me, someone who has used japanese text input extensibly, the wording in the times article seems strange, but I just chalk it up to a foreigner not fully understanding how it works.

    20. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by menace3society · · Score: 1

      It is actually kind of like he said. In the beginning typefaces styles like Roman, Gothic, and Italic would be chosen for their aesthetic and practical qualities (how easy to read, how many words to a page, etc), and also depending to a lesser extent on the language used (Greek, Latin, etc). Now, however, we use italic, bold, underline, or capital/small capital to indicate words that should stand out from the sentence--usually, for emphasis or because they are from a different language (scientific names may or may not be included in this latter category). Japanese, however, has no equivalent distinction--the closest you can come other than katakan/hiragana is gothic/mincho, but 1) mincho characters are somewhat ugly when they're big, 2) gothic characters are illegible when small, and 3) in some cases there may not be an identifiable distinction between characters.

      So the japanese use hiragana mostly to indicate native japanese words (or components of words) for which no kanji exists, or to unambiguously declare the pronunciation of a given word (either in full type or furigana-style ruby), and katakana for 1) emphasis, 2) most loanwords (except tabako, 3) onomatopoeia, and 4) names of animals for which the kanji is no longer on the approved list (e.g. kame*). This coincides neatly with the use of italic in Roman-alphabet-using languages, and more often than not reduces ambiguity and enhances clarity. Although, I do have a rather funny story involving katakana, the Japanese word for poverty, and a couple of hot girls, but this discussion is entirely off-topic as it is.

      *: Oddly, the character for kame is on the Joyo list, but only in the third category of characters which are designated for use in proper names (but not apparently in other uses).

    21. Re:chinese, japanese, it's all the same by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I've seen kana and kanji in boldface and underline, typically in advertising, although admittedly italic is a rarer sight since it deforms the character. I've seen katakana used for Japanese words as well, to my initial surprise upon first visiting the Yodobashi "camera" (Fry's on steroids) shop at the Yodobashi-Umeda in Osaka. Katakana is definitely used for many reasons, but whether it was necessary devote a separate set of glyphs with slightly different rules specifically for these purposes is what I question.

      Having two separate but related systems seems to counter the simplicity value of a phonetic syllablery as compared to Kanji. I'm sure either Katakana or Hiragana alone would have sufficed. That both systems were maintained given their unique histories says a lot about Japan to me. I guess this discussion is old enough, for Slashdot anyway, that being on topic hardly enters into it ;)

      --
      GPL: Free as in will
  17. Too much amusement? by OctaviusIII · · Score: 1

    The question that came to my mind was how damaging such a pod is to one's spirit or creativity, but I suppose it's not too much different than how things have always been. The difference is we watch movies rather than read pulp magazines and $0.10 novels. It'll be interesting to see how the phenomenon evolves.

    --
    What's this? Another weblog? On transit?
  18. Err... First i've heard! by POds · · Score: 1

    Check your sources

    --


    Giving IE users a taste of their own medicine since 2005 - http://pods.-is-a-geek.net/
  19. Golden ball of thread... by electrosoccertux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The more I immerse myself in this media centered world, the more I find myself recalling the fable of the boy who was given the golden ball of thread. Every time he pulled it, he skipped forward in time. While being warned of its power, he began to make regular use of it. He pulled the thread at the beginning of his classes, and when he had to start studying, or when he got put in time out, or whenever he was bored and wanted to get on with the fun things in life. Before he knew it he was on his death bed having skipped the boring and unpleasant parts of his life. The fairy who gave him the ball of yarn was gracious enough to let him live a second chance...and this time he never wished to skip any parts of his life.

    But we don't get a second chance.

    I'm finding the more I spend time NOT doing something digital, the more I enjoy my day. Every time I sit down to watch a movie, play a game, or read Slashdot, I look up and realize I've lost two hours. Where did it go? I never can seem to find those extra 90 minutes that I don't remember having spent.

    Now I ride my bike for fun, or sit on the couch with my pet and call my mother, or hang out with some friends. I'm finding I have all the time in the world now to enjoy myself, and it's all passing at the speed it should. Forget computers, forget movies, forget entertainment centers: I want to live my own life, not watch someone live theirs.

    I think it is better to leave the thread in the box. The fun times wouldn't be fun without the boring ones. Each will come when it comes, and no sooner. Might as well make the most what's inbetween.

    1. Re:Golden ball of thread... by obedeith · · Score: 0

      So so true. I am going to the bike shop to buy myself a mountain bike. Winter is over. There is no real reason to sit hunched over a keyboard. The real world is much more high-definition. (-:

    2. Re:Golden ball of thread... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      true... amazing post...

      being comfortable and creating a bubble of reassuring, totally-in-control experiences is not as good as it sounds...

      it's actually more like a slow walking death.

      but as far as the computer is concerned i spend a good bit of time in front of it... it's productive when i'm making music (creating stuff is as real as real life gets)...

      the frivolous part is definitely reading CNN and Slashdot. ; )

      but you can't create all the time either.

    3. Re:Golden ball of thread... by Das+Modell · · Score: 1
      I'm finding the more I spend time NOT doing something digital, the more I enjoy my day. Every time I sit down to watch a movie, play a game, or read Slashdot, I look up and realize I've lost two hours. Where did it go? I never can seem to find those extra 90 minutes that I don't remember having spent.

      Now I ride my bike for fun, or sit on the couch with my pet and call my mother, or hang out with some friends. I'm finding I have all the time in the world now to enjoy myself, and it's all passing at the speed it should. Forget computers, forget movies, forget entertainment centers: I want to live my own life, not watch someone live theirs.

      You have all the time in the world to do absolutely nothing? Fantastic.
    4. Re:Golden ball of thread... by lokispundit · · Score: 1

      I've got to agree with you...the more I "unplug", the better balanced life seems to become...

      --
      "Don't be so humble - you are not that great." - Golda Meir
    5. Re:Golden ball of thread... by nuzak · · Score: 1

      > ...and this time he never wished to skip any parts of his life.

      And did he re-live his life doing the same grindingly tedious crap that he skipped over the first time?

      Shit, if I thought about it too much, I'd just yank the whole damn ball of yarn.

      --
      Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
  20. Your bedroom by achurch · · Score: 1

    is probably bigger than the average Japanese apartment.

  21. Hmf by BJH · · Score: 1

    Another was "Inu," or "Dog," by Haruko Kashiwagi. It's considered clever, fairly high-toned and mainstream, which is surprising because, in part, it's about a woman who has sex with her dog.

    Supercilious prat.

  22. That was rather rude of you, I think. by Naruki · · Score: 2, Informative

    Look, I couldn't afford the rental rates for the computer, so I just wanted a quick wank at the "Bosomy Babes of Bulgaria" web site you were hunched over. It wouldn't have killed you to lean back a bit, and you wouldn't have gotten anything in your eye.

    By the way, in Japan the private rooms also provide a box of tissues. In case you get a cold, I believe.

  23. Tokyo's Media Immersion Pods? by jdubois79 · · Score: 1

    I can't believe changing the name of something as old as the Comic Cafe (manga kisa) to "Media Immersion Pods" suddenly makes a 30+ year old thing news.

    --
    --------
    Nothing can be done before the tremendous power!
    RabidComics
  24. That's funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every time I ride my bike for fun, or sit on the couch with my pet and call my mother, or hang out with some friends I look at my watch and realize I've lost two hours.

    I don't think either set of activities generates any particularly deep or interesting memories. I try and do new things when I get the chance, but that's pretty rare to be honest. Funnily enough this is actually slightly on topic - one of the most interesting things I've done lately is go to Tokyo and see all the crazy cool stuff they have there.

    1. Re:That's funny... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. I get enough of those moments in class and at work.

  25. A sick person writes... by ofcourseyouare · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "The Japanese system of competition for education, career and social esteem, Dr. Kimura explained, forces young people to obsess over self-presentation, which costs them both fantasy and anonymity, the privileges of childhood... The Gran Cyber Cafés now serve this purpose, he said. "Nobody cares what you do, which enables you to be absorbed in whatever fantasy you want to indulge in through Net surfing, Web games or manga. Yet you can satisfy your timid desire to belong."

    In other words, the basic argument of this article is "the Japanese are sick and manga cafés like this are an interesting symptom of the disease - by comparison with the robust health of Western culture". What nonsense.

    Two key elements...
    * the seamless blending of sexual content and other forms of entertainment
    * the enthusiastic embrace of new forms of culture
    ...I consider to be a symptom of the health of Japanese culture as opposed to US/ UK culture where...
    * sexual content lives in a ghetto in which only those who are talentless or desperate will work, while ultraviolent content is fine
    * new forms of culture are treated with suspicion - even games, for God's sake, after all these years are still disdained.
    So my response is please stop treating this sort of manga café as a kind of boil that reflects some underlying disease, and let's open a chain of these in the west right now.

    But of course, I only think that because I'm sick...

    1. Re:A sick person writes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1.This won't work in america.Culture,laws,biases,conservativism,etc
      consider why you call yourself 'sick'
      2.Your idea will have alot of competition.pubs,topless bars,comics shops,conventions.They cover the spectrum.
      3.Even if the idea works,it'll become a normal hotel/cafe over time.sort of cultural
      resistance.Mainstream culture shuns deviation from accepted schemes.
      4.Normal hotels/cafes already advancing in that direction(slowly).Its called modernization.

    2. Re:A sick person writes... by Chrononium · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that you believe a culture created by military and corporate America in the last fifty years is, in fact, superior or at least different than what the West has had for millennia?

      How about this one instead: why don't the Japanese enthusiastically embrace Western culture, including all the conservative angles? Not so enthusiastic there, huh? Relativism, in any form, is the most tyrannical form of an ethical system in existence. Every one is supposedly free under it, but as soon as someone says, "No, I like this form and not that one," then the person/group is labeled as intolerant or perhaps even dangerous and it is dealt with accordingly.

      Finally, there's this argument: the Japanese, as a nation, are dying. The population continues to age as the birth rate continues to be below replacement. The children often do not return to take care of their elders and many decide to leave the country, presumably for the better quality of life outside. The education system is cutthroat (resembling something of a caste system), further discouraging potential parents because of the required time and monetary input, especially since it won't pay off (no old-age care from the kids, just the social workers and robots).

      How exactly is Japanese culture better?

    3. Re:A sick person writes... by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      What we consider wrong is that people actually prefer spending entire days or nights in cubicle-sized pods surfing the Net to the alternatives. There are supposed to be far better alternatives!

    4. Re:A sick person writes... by Nexx · · Score: 1

      Wow. You paint with very wide brushes, to the point of oversimplification.

      So what you're saying is that you believe a culture created by military and corporate America in the last fifty years is, in fact, superior or at least different than what the West has had for millennia?

      Westernization was happening well before 1945. I'm sorry, but modern Japanese culture is not just a product of "Corporate America" and "Military". Yes, the GHQ had a lot to do with education "reform", but to portray that no pre-1945 cultural artifacts remain is extremely inaccurate.

      How about this one instead: why don't the Japanese enthusiastically embrace Western culture, including all the conservative angles? Not so enthusiastic there, huh? Relativism, in any form, is the most tyrannical form of an ethical system in existence. Every one is supposedly free under it, but as soon as someone says, "No, I like this form and not that one," then the person/group is labeled as intolerant or perhaps even dangerous and it is dealt with accordingly.

      Your logic does not flow. In your first paragraph, you claim that Japanese culture is a product of American interests, and now you're saying that we Japanese have not embraced Western Culture?

      As for cultural intolerance, pot, please meet kettle. All cultures are xenophobic to a point. This is a defense mechanism built-in to cultures in general. While members of a culture are free to experiment into different parts, they are all expected to remain relatively faithful to their parent culture or risk being ostracised.

      Finally, there's this argument: the Japanese, as a nation, are dying. The population continues to age as the birth rate continues to be below replacement. The children often do not return to take care of their elders and many decide to leave the country, presumably for the better quality of life outside.

      How is this different from America? The prevalence of covalecent homes primarily the elderly is an institution founded in the West. So it's okay for the West to adopt these, but not for Japan? That's not exactly a realistic thought.

      I know far more Japanese upper-middle class families who care for their elderly at their on homes than I do American ones. Conversely, I know far more American families who have made the decision to place their elderly into homes. In both cases, they are well-cared for (these are families with reasonable amounts of economic resources); the only differentiation is being the method of care. Perhaps I should not extend America to mean the West, but that's where my experiences lie.

      The education system is cutthroat (resembling something of a caste system), further discouraging potential parents because of the required time and monetary input, especially since it won't pay off (no old-age care from the kids, just the social workers and robots).

      Caste-system? How is this different from the Harvard/Yale/MIT mentality of the US?

      I also question your "potential parents" being discouraged by the required time and monetary input claim. The discouragement isn't how much it costs to educate their children, but how much it costs to be independent. Honestly, I have yet to meet a family, Japanese or American, who made their decision to have children as a mode of investment for themselves.

  26. no doubt many hidden webcams in these places by bobamu · · Score: 1

    So you'll be able to conduct your field study from the comfort of your own bedroom/loft/basement/prison.

  27. I have used one... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are a lot of internet cafe's in Japan, big chains being Gera Gera and Popeye Media Cafe. I have tried out a few.

    They are actually really good. Keep in mind that a lot of people live in small houses in Japan, so go out a lot to eat and for entertainment because of limited space at home. Also, a lot of people live with their families until their late 20s, sometimes with grandparents too. So, privacy and "getting away from the family" are worth paying for.

    For under a fiver (800-900 yen) you can get a private cubicle for three hours. Browse the net, play some games, watch some TV or a DVD. They have libraries of magazines and manga to read too, and free drinks. You can order food too, or get a cubicle where you can lie down on a futon or sit with your girlfriend.

    Many even have showers, blankets and pillows available. You could pretty much live there if you wanted to. In fact, many offer discounts on up to 8 hour blocks, or overnight stays.

    I know it's hard to imagine the appeal for people in the west, but they are good. And not just frequented by men either, women use them too.

    The only issue I had was that they seem to invariably be quite hot, despite air conditioning. The Japanese seem to have a higher tolerance for heat than me - well, I was born in Yorkshire in March so...

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  28. Not a "Pod" in the traditional sense of the word.. by Wazukkithemaster · · Score: 1

    This is NOT a pod... it's a cubicle... Wake me up when its a pod; then i'll be interested.

    --
    Live according to the Categorical Imperative. If the Categorical Imperative tells you not to live by it... ignore it
  29. Gotta love HP's spin department by billcopc · · Score: 1
    It was in Japan that I first heard the word "infomania," a 2005 coinage by Hewlett-Packard, whose study last May showed that compulsive e-mailing and text-messaging do more damage to the I.Q. than regular marijuana use.


    Just being a part of today's fast-paced bureaucracy is more damaging to the I.Q. than any controlled substance in existence. Nothing is more destructive than being shoved through the screwed-up consumerist system that's growing ever-further removed from its roots. The fact that I'm kind of seduced by the concept of these digital-immersion cafés is puzzling, yet I have been "living digitally" for nearly a decade. It's a shame this isolated existence is still limited to entertainment. For most people, work means wasting a substantial portion of your day commuting, only to do some faceless job in a cubicle whose only significance is to bring you closer to people who will disturb and distract you.

    Hell, if surgeons can perform their work remotely with a TV and robot arms, why the hell can't I do tech support at home in my underwear, or write my 8 hours of code at a cozy cyber café with plentiful food & drink a mere footsteps away. A cube farm is a cube farm, doesn't matter what building it's in, it's a desk with a computer and a phone; I don't see why most office jobs couldn't be abstracted to any desk+PC+phone setup anywhere on the grid. Why do we have to squeeze in traffic every day, burning this so-called "precious" gasoline ? Japan has always been an early adopter of technology, they seem to understand it better than we do. I hope this type of reality-disconnect café concept grows beyond the entertainment sphere. Webcam, phone/headset, internet.. you can hear me, you can see me, now let me do my work!
    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
    1. Re:Gotta love HP's spin department by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      Webcam, phone/headset, internet.. you can hear me, you can see me, now let me do my work!
      -
      the big problem comes into play with two factors

      1 the diff between residental and business net access
      2 sometimes being able to reach out and hit somebody is required
      (sometimes the suits need "facetime"

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    2. Re:Gotta love HP's spin department by billcopc · · Score: 1

      Reach out and hit somebody: the perfect application for my USB boxing glove accessory!

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
  30. Ever been to Tokyo? by Is0m0rph · · Score: 1

    Walk around with the sea of people in Tokyo for a while (or even worse drive) and you'll want to lock yourself in a small cubicle with a TV and internet for a few hours. After working in Tokyo I can see why cafe's like this are appealing.

  31. Totally new technology by jdbartlett · · Score: 2, Funny

    Wow, VHS! How come Japan gets all the new technology first?

  32. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" MORE... by davidsyes · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's MORE than a Manga Cafe. I've been to TWO of them. They also have Play Station, I think X box IIRC, and VCR/DVD combos. If you go in there with the right gear, you could **probably** bootleg the hell out of DVDs and other media. Not that I support/condone that.

    But, if those existed in the US, you'd have some form of illegal sex, human fluids, spilt drinks, and maybe even drug activity. But, aside from THAT, the MPAA? and RIAA and BSA would demand copying of license or IDs and installation of anti-piracy tools.

    The anti-porn legislation types would demand installation of video cameras to deter sex and abuse of children.

    Cities hard up for tax revenues would impose harsh and draconian "arcade" permit requirement upon each machine. I suppose Internet cafes already pay these. IN Stockton, California, any such business would have to pay these arcade fees via the police department.

    They places would lose money, and go out of business. All because of church groups, drug dealers, sex addicts, and the RIAA/others complaining about piracy and loss of revenues.

    But, yeh, most of all, here in the US, we don't have the "crowd effect" of 10 million to 20 million (I forget the exact number, but the pop and density are high...) people in the size of Tokyo pushing to get out of the house and stay out as long as possible. The main Shinjuku station probably moves more people in a week than NYC might in a month or two. The per-square foot of utilization by shops, eateries, jewelers, and more is mind-boggling. Not a space is wasted, and most of the shops and such all seem new, abuzz, and entrepreneurial, tho there are some larger chains or big-budget stores present. There is a certain "energy" in the air I felt in Tokyo, and I NEVER feel that here in the US except on occasions of HUGE parades, shows or concerts., and THAT is mostly all due to "herd mentality", not a daily occurrence.

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  33. What it is by BoxSocial · · Score: 0

    So...it's an internet café?

    --
    Give me good ratings or I will close down the internet.
  34. Bottle of Lube? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a complimentary bottle of personal lubricant and a box of tissues?

  35. Testament? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Funny, I thought it was some sort of running gag.

  36. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" MORE... by DashItAll · · Score: 1

    No, it's JUST A MANGA CAFE. I've been to FAR MORE THAN TWO OF THEM. It's cool, sure -- but what the poster was trying to get across was that it is patently stupid to give something a fancy title for the purpose of writing some inflated tech-porn bullshit. Just call it a Cyber-Awesome Orgazmo Fanboy LogonDeck Capsulon 4000 if you really need to keep your nipples hard.

  37. Pure Crap.... (I Live Here) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I LIVE here, and this is just hype. These are the same old internet cafes they've had here for the last five years. I should know. I was in one day before yesterday.

    And people don't come here because they're "seeking refuge". They come to surf porn and play video games, just like in the West.

    Mind you, sometimes they use them to get it on, as I found out to my surprise one afternoon.

    The NY Times is really fishing around the bottom of the barrel to be running this "scoop" LOL

  38. US has 4000 sqft houses, not 400 sqft by peter303 · · Score: 1

    On average US people lie in much large housing. They can have seperate well-equiped, media spaces. Nearly every member of a a suburban familiy probably has their on TV, DVD player and music player, plus maybe a high-quality family one of each.

  39. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" MORE... by davidsyes · · Score: 1

    OK. I defer. I've only been to TWO of them, and was only there barely 3 months. I wish I could have had more time and money and a European/Asian passport of preference so I could stay AND work **180** days instead of 90 and NO working. Damned politicians.

    Also, yeh, they do tend to favor 8-12 word descriptions for some things, huh.

    Boy, I'd love to revisit Funenokagakukan a 3rd, 4th, and 5th time...

    --
    Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
  40. Re:wtf "Media Immersion Pods" MORE... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you think Japan is lacking in state regulation and taxation, you're insane.

    And every Manga cafe I've been to has video games and computers as well. This is nothing special.

    Leave it to slashdot to mod the parent to +4 when it's a lot of trite stereotypes and baseless assumptions.

  41. Not all that new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is really an improvement over an idea that's been in vogue in Korea since the early 90s. The "bidio bang" (video room) has been a common sight many a Korean city neighborhoods. The Japanese have simply combined it with an internet cafe and spruced it up.

    I am not knocking them or taking away from them the credit they deserve for inventiveness; I just want to provide some historical background and perspective.

    I hope the idea spreads everywhere.